The Rover Boys Megapack

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The Rover Boys Megapack Page 254

by Edward Stratemeyer


  Grace was on the watch for their return, and as the biplane came down she ran to greet them, and there was a great jollification, the girls laughing and crying by turns. The students and teachers crowded around, wanting to know the particulars of what had happened. A little later Songbird and Stanley appeared, having driven over from Brill to learn if any word had been received from the Rovers.

  “Glad you caught those rascals,” was Songbird’s comment. “And I hope they send ’em all to prison for life!”

  “They’ll be sure to get pretty long terms,” answered Sam.

  Everybody has his or her story to tell, and that day there were but few lessons both at Hope and at Brill. The Rovers were the heroes of the occasion, and everybody wanted to congratulate them on what they had done.

  “Well, it was a pretty strenuous experience,” said Dick to his friends. He did not realize that still more strenuous happenings were in store for him and his brothers. What they were, will be told in another volume, to be entitled, “The Rover Boys in New York; Or, Saving Their Father’s Honor.”

  All of the girls had been too upset by what had happened to go on with their studies, and it was thought best to let them go home for awhile and take it easy. The boys, too, went home, to let their folks know all the details of the happening.

  “You did very well, boys!” cried their father, when he greeted them. “Very well indeed! I am proud of you!”

  “And the best of it is, all of those rascals are now where they can bother us no longer,” added Randolph Rover.

  Then the boys wanted to know about their parent’s health and his business prospects.

  “I am feeling quite some better,” said Mr. Rover. “And I think that before a great while all those business complications will be straightened out.”

  “That’s fine, dad!” cried Tom, and threw his cap in the air. “Hurrah! We come out ahead every time, don’t we?” And then he did a jig, he felt so happy.

  “Let’s go for a sail in the Dartaway!” came from Sam. “We’ll call on Peter Marley and the rest of those folks and let them know how we rounded up Crabtree, Sobber & Company.”

  “That’s the talk!” exclaimed Dick. “A sail will just suit me!”

  And then off rushed the three Rover boys for an outing in their biplane. And here we will leave them, wishing them all the good times possible.

  THE ROVER BOYS IN NEW YORK

  CHAPTER I

  THE BOYS AT BRILL

  “Boys, what do you say to a trip in the Dartaway this afternoon?”

  “Suits me, Sam,” replied Tom Rover.

  “Providing the breeze doesn’t get too strong,” returned Dick Rover, as he put up his hand to feel the air.

  “Oh, I don’t think it will blow too much,” went on Sam Rover. “I don’t mind some air.”

  “But no more storms for me!” cried his brother Tom, with a shake of his head. “That last old corker was enough for me.”

  “Where shall we go?” questioned Dick, with a queer little smile creeping around the corners of his mouth.

  “Oh, my, just to hear Dick!” cried Tom, with a grin. “As if he would go anywhere but to Hope Seminary, to call on Dora!”

  “And as if you would go anywhere but to call on Nellie, at the same place!” retorted the oldest Rover boy.

  “Now, children, children’” came sweetly from Sam. “You mustn’t quarrel about the dear girls. I know both of you are as much gone as can be. But—”

  “And how about Grace, Sam?” said Tom. “Didn’t I hear you making up some poetry about her yesterday, ‘Those limpid eyes and pearly ears, and’—”

  “Rats, Tom! I don’t make up poetry—I leave that to Songbird,” interrupted the youngest Rover boy. “Just the same, it will be nice to call on the girls. They’ll be looking for us some day this week.”

  “That’s right—and maybe we can give them a little ride,” put in Dick Rover.

  “Do you remember the ride we gave Dora and Nellie, when we rescued them from Sobber, Crabtree, and the others?” asked Tom.

  “Not likely to forget that in a hurry,” answered his big brother. “By the way, I wonder when the authorities will try those rascals?”

  “Not right away, I’m thinking, Dick,” answered Tom. “The law is rather slow up here in these back counties.”

  “Never mind—they will get what is coming to them sooner or later,” was Sam’s comment.

  “Abduction is rather a serious offense.”

  “Right you are,” answered Dick. “And I’ll be glad to see Crabtree, Sobber, and our other enemies behind the bars. Then they won’t be able to bother us any more.”

  “That will be the end of Sobber’s efforts to annex the Stanhope fortune,” mused Sam. “How hard he did try to get it away from Mrs. Stanhope and the girls!”

  “I shouldn’t have minded that had he used fair methods, Sam,” returned the big brother. “But when it came to stealing and abducting—”

  “Hello, you fellows!” shouted a voice from behind the Rover boys. “Plotting mischief?”

  “Not just now, Stanley,” answered Dick, as his college chum caught him by the shoulder and swung him around playfully.

  “Want to go for a row on the river?” asked Stanley Browne.

  “Not just now, Stanley. I’ve got a lecture to attend, and this afternoon we are going over to Hope in the biplane.”

  “Wish I had a flying machine,” said the student, wistfully.

  “Better swap the boat for one,” suggested Sam.

  “No, I think rowing is safer. Some day, if you are not careful, you’ll get an awful tumble from that machine.”

  “We try to be as careful as possible,” answered Dick. “Seriously, though, Stanley, I don’t care for flying as much as I thought I would.”

  “Is that so? Now, I thought you were planning a honeymoon trip by aeroplane. Think of the novelty of it!”

  “No, a steamboat or a parlor car will be good enough for me, when I go on a honeymoon trip,” answered Dick, and for a very good reason he blushed deeply.

  “Hello, William Philander Tubbs!” cried Tom, as a tall, dudish-looking student crossed the college campus. “What’s the price of eggs this morning?”

  “What is that, Tom?” questioned the stylishly-dressed youth, as he turned in the direction of the others.

  “I asked what was the price of eggs?” said Tom, innocently.

  “The—er—the price of eggs? How should I know?” stammered William Philander Tubbs in astonishment.

  “Weren’t you in the chicken business once?”

  “Gracious me! No, Tom, no!”

  “Funny I made the mistake—and I want to know the price of eggs the worst way,” went on the fun-loving Rover, innocently.

  “What do you want to know the price of eggs for?” questioned William Philander, curiously.

  “Why, you see, we’ve got a new problem in geometry to solve, and the price of eggs will help out,” continued Tom, looking very serious.

  “What is it, Tom?”

  “It’s this, Tubby, my boy. If the diameter of an egg ten degrees west of its North Pole is two and eleven-tenths inches, what is the value of the shell unfilled? I thought you might help me out on that.”

  “Tom, you are poking fun at me!” cried the dudish student, as a snicker went up from the other youths. “And please don’t call me Tubby, I beg of you,” pleaded William Philander.

  “All right, Billy Gander,” murmured Tom. “It shan’t occur again.”

  “Billy Gander! That is worse than Tubby!” groaned the dudish youth. “Oh, you are awful!” he added, and strode off, trying to look very indignant.

  “Poor Tubbs, I wonder if he will ever be sensible and get over his dudish ways,” was Dick’s comment.

  “I doubt it—for it seems to be born in him,�
� returned Sam.

  “But he’s a good sort with it all,” ventured Stanley Browne.

  “First-rate,” agreed Tom. “But I—well, I simply can’t help poking fun at him when he’s around, he’s such a dandy, and so lordly in his manner.”

  “Here comes Songbird!” interrupted Sam. “And, see, he is writing verses, as usual. I wonder—”

  “Look!” exclaimed Dick. “Oh! There’s a collision for you!”

  William Philander Tubbs had started across the campus with his head high in the air. He was looking to one side and did not notice the approach of another student, who was coming forward thoughtfully, carrying a pad in one hand and writing as he walked. There was a sudden meeting of the pair, and the pad fell to the ground and with it the fancy headgear the dudish student was wearing.

  “Oh, I—er—I beg your pardon, really I do, don’t you know!” stammered William Philander.

  “Great Hannibal’s tombstone!” spluttered the other student. “What are you trying to do, Tubbs, knock me down?”

  “I beg your pardon, Powell, I didn’t see you coming,” answered the other, as he picked up his hat and commenced to brush it off with care.

  “You must be getting blind,” growled John Powell, otherwise known as Songbird. “Confound the luck—you spoilt one of my best rhymes,” he added, as he stooped to pick up his writing pad.

  “Sorry, upon my honor I am,” returned William Philander. “Can I help you out on it?”

  “I don’t think you can. Did you ever try to write poetry—real poetry, I mean?”

  “No, my dear boy, no. I’m afraid I would not be equal to it.”

  “Then I don’t see how you are going to help me,” murmured Songbird, and he passed on a few steps, coming to a halt presently to jot down some words on his pad.

  “Hello, Songbird!” called out Tom. “How is the Muse today, red-hot?”

  For a moment John Powell did not answer, but kept on writing. Then his face broke out into a sudden smile.

  “There, that’s it!” he cried. “I’ve got it at last! I knew I’d get it if I kept at it long enough.”

  “Knew you’d get what, the measles?” asked the fun-loving Tom.

  “‘Measles’ nothing!” snorted the would-be poet. “I have been writing a poem on ‘The Springtime of Love,’ and I wished to show how—”

  “‘The Springtime of Love!’” interrupted Tom. “That must be a second cousin to the ditty entitled ‘’Tis Well to Meet Her at the Well.’”

  “I never heard of such a poem,” answered Songbird, with a serious air. “How does it go?”

  “It doesn’t go, Songbird; it stands still. But what have you got on the pad?”

  “Yes, let us hear the latest effusion,” put in Sam.

  “But not if it takes too long,” was Dick’s comment. “I’ve only got about ten minutes before that lecture on ‘The Cave Dwellers.’”

  “I can give Songbird six minutes,” said Stanley, as he consulted his watch.

  “This is—er—something of a private poem,” stammered Songbird. “I wrote it for a—er—for a personal friend of mine.”

  “Minnie Sanderson!” cried Sam, mentioning the name of a farmer’s daughter with whom all were well acquainted, and a young lady Songbird called on occasionally.

  “Read it, anyway, Songbird,” said Dick.

  “Well, if you care to hear it,” responded the would-be poet, and he began to read from the pad:

  “In early Spring, when flowers bloom

  In garden and on fields afar,

  My thoughts go out to thee, sweet love,

  And then I wonder where you are!

  When pansies show their varied hues

  And birds are singing as they soar,

  I listen and I look, and dream

  Of days when we shall meet once more!”

  “Grand! fine! immense!” murmured Tom. “Byron couldn’t hold a candle to that, Songbird!”

  “I listen to the tiny brook

  That winds its way o’er rock and sand

  And in the running water see

  A face that—that—that—”

  “Go ahead, Songbird!” cried Sam, as the would-be poet stumbled and halted.

  “I—er—I had the last line, but Tubbs knocked it out of me,” grumbled Songbird. “And say, he knocked something else out of me!” he exclaimed suddenly. “I was going to tell you an important bit of news.”

  “You were?” cried Dick. “What?”

  “The word just came in over the telephone, from the weekly newspaper office. Doctor Wallington said you would want to know about it.”

  “But what is it?” demanded Sam, impatiently.

  “Josiah Crabtree has escaped from jail.”

  “Escaped!” ejaculated Tom.

  “Why, we were just talking about him!” put in Dick “When did this happen?”

  “Last night, so the newspaper man said. It seems there was a small fire at the jail—down in the kitchen. There was great excitement, for supper was just being served. In the excitement three of the prisoners, who were out of their cells, escaped. Josiah Crabtree was one of them.”

  “Too bad!” murmured Sam. “And we thought he was safe!”

  “This spells Trouble for us,” was Tom’s comment, and Dick nodded his head, to show that he was of the same opinion.

  CHAPTER II

  ABOUT THE PAST

  “Did you get any more particulars?” asked Sam, of the college poet.

  “No. The newspaper man was busy, so the Doctor said, and didn’t have time to go into details,” answered Songbird.

  “Did he say who the other prisoners were who got away?” asked Dick.

  “Yes, a tramp who was up for robbing a man on the road and a bank clerk who took some money from the bank.”

  “None of the crowd we are interested in,” said Tom.

  “I’m glad of it,” returned his older brother. “It is bad enough for Crabtree to get away. I hope they keep a strict guard over the others after this.”

  “Oh, they will, rest assured of that,” came from Stanley Browne. “The head jailer will get a raking over the coals for this, mark my words.”

  “The Stanhopes and the Lanings will be sorry to learn that Crabtree got away,” said Sam. “I wonder if they aren’t searching for him,” mused Sam.

  “Oh, they’ll search for all of them,” put in Songbird. “I think the newspaper man said the sheriff had a posse out.”

  “Too bad!” said Dick, shaking his head gravely. “And just when we felt sure old Crabtree wouldn’t be able to give us any more trouble!”

  “It beats the nation, what that man can do!” cried Sam. “Maybe be hypnotized one of the jailers—just as he hypnotized Mrs. Stanhope years ago.

  “He’d be equal to it—if he got the chance,” answered Tom; and then all of the students had to go in to their classes.

  To those who have read the previous volumes in this “Rover Boys Series” of books, the lads we have just met will need no special introduction. For the benefit of my new readers, however, let me state that the Rover boys were three in number, Dick being the oldest, fun-loving Tom coming next, and Sam being about a year younger still. When at home they lived with their father, Anderson Rover, and their Uncle Randolph and Aunt Martha on a beautiful farm called Valley Brook, in New York State.

  Years before, and while their father was in Africa, the three boys had been sent by their uncle to Putnam Hall Military Academy, as related in detail in the first volume of this series, called “The Rover Boys at School.” At the Hall they had made a number of friends, including Songbird Powell and the dudish student, William Philander Tubbs. They had also made some enemies, who did their best to bring the Rover boys to grief, but without success.

  A term at school had been followed b
y a short cruise on the ocean, and then a trip to the jungles of Africa, whither the lads went to find their father, who had disappeared. Then, during vacation, the boys took a trip West, and then another trip on the Great Lakes. After that they went in the mountains, and then came back to Putnam Hall, to go into camp with their fellow cadets.

  This term at Putnam Hall was followed by a long journey on land and sea, to a far-away island of the Pacific, where the boys and their friends had to play “Robinson Crusoe” for a while. Then they returned to this country, and, in a houseboat, sailed down the Ohio and the Mississippi Rivers. After leaving the Mississippi they took an outing on the plains, and then went down into southern waters, where, in the Gulf of Mexico, they solved the mystery of a deserted steam yacht.

  “And now for home and a big rest!” said Dick, and they went back to the farm. But here something very unusual occurred, and the boys had as lively a time as ever.

  While at school the three Rover boys had become well acquainted with three girls, Dora Stanhope and her cousins, the two Laning sisters, Nellie and Grace. Dora was the only daughter of Mrs. Stanhope, a widow, and soon she and Dick became the warmest of friends, while Tom was quite taken by Nellie, and Sam often “paired off” with Grace.

  In those days Josiah Crabtree had been an instructor at Putnam Hall. He was very dictatorial, and none of the cadets liked him, and the Rovers liked him still less when they learned that he was trying to practically hypnotize Mrs. Stanhope into marrying him, so that he could get control of the fortune which the widow was holding in trust for Dora. They foiled the teacher’s efforts to wed the lady, and in the end Josiah Crabtree had to leave Putnam Hall. Later still he was arrested for some of his misdeeds and given a short sentence in jail.

  The Stanhope fortune, as a part of the money coming to the Stanhopes and the Lanings was called, had come to Mr. Stanhope in a peculiar way, and some outsiders claimed the treasure, which, at that time, was secreted in a spot among the West Indies called Treasure Isle. There was a lively chase to get there first, but the Rovers won out, and because of this their enemies were more bitter than ever.

 

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